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Monday, May 7, 2012

How to increase your sight-reading ability

Sight reading can be very frustrating for the beginner. Learning to do several things at once - read the notes, move your fingers, count, etc. - and do it quickly is no easy task. Luckily, it is a skill that can be easily learned provided you have the determination to do it. You see, the brain needs to be trained to do all these things quickly and accurately.


So how do you improve on your sight reading besides practice, practice, and practice? Well, here are a few tips that will hopefully help you:
  • Check the Key-Signature - Always check the key signature and make a mental note of them before you begin. A piece can sound totally wrong because you didn't observe the sharps and flats.
  • Look ahead - When your fingers are playing a note/group of notes/chord at a specific point in time/beat, your eyes and brain should already be reading AT LEAST the next note/group of notes/chord if not 3-5 ahead of it. Think of it this way - how can you expect your brain to read, decipher, and tell which muscle to move, at what speed in the same instant you have to play it? No matter how good you are, there will be some lag. Less for the more experienced, and more for the less experienced.
  • Count - Always count, whether aloud or in your mind (I would suggest counting out loud for beginners). If your timing is incorrect, the music wouldn't sound right and it would be that much harder to make sense of what you are playing.
  • Start Slowly - No one is going to boo you for playing it slowly, but if you play a whole bunch of wrong notes in wrong timing.... well, you're up for a chance for more criticisms. If you play it slow, but get the notes and rhythm/timing right, then all they can say is "it should have been faster," but if you play a bunch of gibberish made up of wrong notes, wronte timing, and/or rhythm, then your audience may not know what it is you are trying to play at all.
  • Don't make faces - Come one, no one expects you to play a sight readed piece perfectly. Don't be hard on yourself. Sometimes, slight mistakes aren't noticed. However, when you make faces (i.e. grimace) when you accidentally hit the wrong note, you call out the mistake. Can you imagine your audience watching you make weird looking faces throughout your performance? Not a good idea. Don't call them (your mistakes) out. Be confident.
When you have a feel for it, then try to add dynamics (the loud and soft). Start with just observing the forte/piano, etc. and then the crescendo/decrescendos. At this time, you can also try the tempo changes (accelerando/ritartando, etc.)

Sight reading is a lot of fun. Don't beat yourself over mistakes that you make. Laugh it off! No one is perfect.

I would love to hear from you about what you think about sight-reading, or to share some of your ideas on how you can help make sight-reading easier or fun! Tell me what you think.

Scales - Dos and Don'ts

I cannot stress enough the importance of scales. Yes, I know they are boring, but if you are fluent in scales and play them well, you will have tackled at least 50% of any music. Key signatures, running passages, fingering... they are all found in scales. To ensure that you have learned them the right way, there are a few dos and don'ts:

DO:
  • Practice them regularly
  • Use different rhythmic patterns
  • Learn all chromatic, major, harmonic minor, and melodic minor keys (try pentatonic,or whole tone ones too - they are fun!)
  • Try to play them in contrary motion (opposite directions starting on the same note)
  • Start from 1 octave and move to at least 2 if not 4 octaves per scale
  • Use a metronome and increase your speed as you progress
  • Use the correct fingering
  • Relax and have fun!

DON'T:
  • Shake your wrists with each beat - count with your mouth or in your head; not with your wrists
  • Use the "coin at the back of your hand" method - you will ruin your piano technique. Use your arms!
  • Stiffen up your fingers/wrists. They should be flexible and fluid-like
  • Play them as loud as possible - you want firm fingers, but not hammering ones
Scales can be fun. Vary the rhythm. Try these below or create your own!



How do you practice your scales? Please share your story.

Thursday, January 19, 2012

Can Music Make You Smarter? By Wendy Harris

Exposing their young children to music just comes naturally to Jill and Bob Williams of Appleton.

"Music is a huge part of our life," said Jill Williams, who plays piano, and also bassoon for the UW Fox Valley Concert Band and a local woodwind quintet.

Since Rose, 3, and her baby sister, Lillian, 9 months, were born, music has been as integral a part of their lives as learning to walk and talk. Bob, a baritone with the White Heron Chorale, is always singing at home. Jill, meanwhile, is frequently practicing for concerts, or playing the piano, while Rose dances and keeps time with her castanets and baby Lillian bounces nearby in her exer-saucer.

Jill is convinced all this music exposure is paying off.

"Rose is 3 and she is reading," she said. "She has the gift of language and I can't help but believe it's because of rhythm and rhyming and the flow of music."

A growing body of research supports her observations.

Exposing a child to great music — as a listener and as a player — is good for brain development.
"Nothing activates as many areas of the brain as music," says researcher Donald A. Hodges, Covington Distinguished Professor of Music Education and director of the Music Research Institute at the University of North Carolina at Greensboro.

And to answer a question that has been floating around both scholarly and in popular culture for a while: Does music make you smarter?

"The answer is 'no' in a superficial sense," Hodges said. In 1993, experimenters claimed that listening to a Mozart sonata would make your IQ increase by eight points. Subsequent work, Hodges explained, proved that such listening would sharpen a subject's spatial-temporal relationships momentarily. After a short while, the subject would go back to being just as smart as before. Or dumb.

But, he explained, a rich environment makes a difference: "The brain: Use it or lose it. The more education you have, the more the interconnections in the brain. Music changes the brain."

It's an observation that Patricia DeCorsey, coordinator of Lawrence University's Early Childhood Music Program in Appleton, has been making for years.

"By introducing children to music, so many areas of the brain benefit at the same time, like the mathematical and language centers," said DeCorsey. "It's really a super-advantage."

DeCorsey has headed the childhood music program for 15 years of its 20-year history. Age-appropriate classes are available for children as young as 6 months old.

"Children learn musical concepts only until about age 7," DeCorsey said. "After that, the learning pretty much stops. That's why it's so important to start children early."

Rose Williams started in the program when she was 2; and her sister, Lillian, will start this fall.
"We took the Mozart and movement class this past year and it's just incredible how she came out of her shell," Jill Williams said.

The Lawrence classes, led by trained professional musicians, introduce basic music concepts and give hands-on experience to play with a variety of folk, instrumental and percussion instruments.

Appleton mother Jennifer Ganser enrolled her first child, Jackie, in the program when she was a baby for something fun to do. Two more babies and five years later, Ganser believes her three children have gained more than just enjoyment from the classes.

"You can just see them light up when they are there," Ganser said. "We've really seen them progress."
Jackie, now 6, loves music at school and has been asking to take violin and piano lessons, Ganser added.

While music and brain research moves at a slow pace, Hodges has outlined some major findings:

Disproving earlier assumptions that musical activity takes place in the right hemisphere of the brain, the activity occurs with equal vigor in the left — or rational — hemisphere. Music is an emotional and intellectual activity that engages all the brain. Almost.

During performance, there is almost no activity in the frontal lobe, where conscious thought takes place.
When Yo-Yo Ma is playing his cello in concert he's not thinking, Hodges argues. All the thought took place earlier and if he were to think now it would impede his playing. He is simply performing, much like a highly trained athlete.

"Music is always a physical activity," Hodges said. "Musicians are small-muscle athletes." And not just the performer. A listener sitting still in a classical concert hall is having the area of the brain that controls motion stimulated. Thus, that convention — not moving during classical performances — is unnatural.
A person with brain damage from a stroke may not be able to speak but can sing because the area that controls music is not damaged, said Shannon de L'Etoile, who heads the music therapy program at the University of Miami.

A therapist will get the patient to sing a phrase, then change it to spoken language with an exaggerated rhythm, and finally to natural language.

"We are rerouting through the healthy part of the brain," de L'Etoile said. "The spinal chord reacts immediately to rhythm."

Such therapy can be used with Parkinson's patients, she added.

And, researchers have learned that autistic children are capable of reproducing patterns of music, which a therapist can translate to language and to unlock the social interactions autism prevents.

"Music makes you smarter because it helps you understand yourself as a human being and your relationship to the world," says Hodges.

Though, all humans are musical, regardless of training or IQ.

"From the least to the most intelligent, everyone can have a meaningful music experience," he said.
Wendy Harris can be reached at 920-993-1000, ext. 526, or at mail:wharris@postcrescent.com. Knight Ridder Newspapers reporter Enrique Fernandez and correspondent Jacob Goldstein contributed to this report.